User:Sdadamson
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[edit] Scott Adamson
Student in the Department of Meteorology at the University of Utah.
Some links of personal interest:
Assignment #2 (part 6)
- A FA-class or featured article is an article which as been well written and received a peer review. This means that the article has valid information and requires no further editing.
- An A-class article is one that has met almost all requirements for the featured article status with the exception of missing a peer review.
- A GA-class or good article is one that need some more work to be nominated for featured class status. A good article provides sufficient information but could be better written for full clarification of the subject.
- A B-class article is one that needs completion to be considered a good article. Information is incomplete.
- A Start-class article is an article that may have some good information but lacking in many portions of the subject matter. the article must contain a useful graphic, multiple links about the subject matter, a subheading that completely talks about the one portion of the subject or multiple subheadings talking about what may be added to complete the article.
- A Stub-class article is an article that has little or no information needing a lot of work.
Proposal (part 7)
For my "wiki" project, I would like to elaborate on what a Weather Bomb is. The page has a three sentence definition of what a weather bomb is. I would like to give this page some attention because it has a assessment rating of "Stub-class" article and I would like to learn more about weather bombs and how they form.
Current Wikipedia information for Weather bombs
- Here is the link to the current Weather bomb page.
- Here is the link to the talk page for the Weather Bomb.
Websites that may be helpful
- Climatology of the "Bomb"
- “Weather Bomb Event, June 21 2002”
- Bluestein Synoptic-Dynamic Meteorology in Midlatitudes Vol II